Crematory regulations vary widely

Georgia case highlights disparities in states’ cremation laws

The ghastly discovery of scores of bodies discarded in the woods near a Georgia crematory has illustrated what consumer advocates say is a lack of state regulation and oversight of the industry.

Ten states have no laws at all, and most of those that do including Georgia lack adequate enforcement, consumer advocates say.

A Georgia State Patrol officer talks to the driver of a Batesville
Casket Co. truck on the road leading to the Tri-State Crematory
outside of Noble, Ga. Officials continue to uncover bodies on the
crematory property.

Georgia lawmakers moved quickly to tighten rules for crematories and treatment of the dead after rotting corpses were found near the Tri-State Crematory in Nobel. The bodies had been taken there for cremation but were left in garages, vaults or the woods.

Ray Brent Marsh, the operator, is charged with theft by deception for allegedly taking payment for cremations not performed and giving families wood chips or cement powder instead of ashes.

One proposed law in Georgia would close a loophole that allowed crematories like Tri-State that do not open to the public for memorial services to operate without a license or state inspections. The bill also would broaden the definition of mistreating the dead to include abandoning or throwing away a body intended for burial or cremation.

Hodgepodge of laws

The Georgia case has highlighted the disparities in state laws at a time when cremations are on the rise. Twenty-five percent of the 2.3 million people who died in the United States in 2000 were cremated, according to the Cremation Association of North America. The group estimates that figure will double by 2025.

Twenty-three states license their crematories, according to the association.

Florida and California have the most comprehensive laws because they require inspections, according to association executive director Jack Springer. He said California also requires crematory operators to pass training programs.

In most of New England and Texas, state laws require crematories to be located at not-for-profit cemeteries.

"In New England, where the majority of crematories are on cemetery grounds, you're not running into the problems like in Georgia," Carlson said. "It's much more out in the open. It's not hidden in some remote countryside location or warehouse."

Lawmakers in several states have said there need to be stricter rules for punishing negligent crematories. In Michigan, for example, a lawmaker who is also a funeral director wants to make negligent disposal of human remains punishable by up to 10 years in prison and a $50,000 fine. Such an act is not currently a crime in Michigan.

No check to balance

Springer said problems seen in Georgia are rooted in the subcontracting system. In the Georgia case, about 25 to 30 funeral homes in Georgia, Tennessee and Alabama sent bodies to Tri-State for cremation instead of doing it themselves.

"He said he was doing it. He wasn't doing it. Nobody checked him," Springer said. "What we need is people to be trained and be responsible for people they hire to do their cremations."

Bob Fells, general counsel of the International Cemetery and Funeral Assn., based in Reston, Va., said most states have good guidelines but do not enforce them. He doesn't want federal oversight.

"We've always found that state regulation is more efficient and effective than federal oversight," he said.